Sam Hoyt (rt.) is accused of sexually harassing an upstate New York woman who he got a job at the DMV.

An upstate New York woman claims that she suffered relentless sexual harassment by a married Cuomo economic development aide who abruptly resigned last month.

Lisa Marie Cater says in a blistering federal court lawsuit that Sam Hoyt forcefully kissed and groped her during multiple unwanted visits to her home, sent her naked pictures of himself and even grabbed her crotch.

“You know this is what I want!” he hissed while squeezing her private parts at a local park, the complaint says.

Cater, 51, says she endured the abuse for nearly a year in part because she was too afraid to speak out against the man who got her a job at the DMV.

“The facts alleged in this complaint regarding Mr. Hoyt were not provided to state investigators and in many cases contradict the public allegations made in the last several weeks,” said Cuomo chief counsel Alphonso David.

The tawdry affair was set in motion in October 2015 when Cater, a domestic abuse survivor, was in jeopardy of losing her apartment.

Cater reached out to the Empire State Development Corp. for help, the suit says.

Hoyt, pictured in 2006, resigned from his high-ranking position as an economic development aide for Cuomo in October 2017.

(David Duprey/AP)

To Cater’s surprise, the reply email that landed in her inbox came directly from Hoyt, who she had met at a 2008 fundraiser.

Cater says she feared speaking out against her abuser, who got her a job.

(Twitter)

The image made Cater “shake uncontrollably” — “adding to her symptoms of depression and anxiety,” the suit says.

With Hoyt ignoring her repeated pleas to be left alone, Cater reached out to Cuomo’s office for help through phone calls, an email and a Facebook message, the suit says.

She received no response. Hoyt, who was outed in 2008 for having a two-year affair with a 23-year-old student intern, told her that he had spoken to the governor’s office and was instructed to “make this go away.” Cater later agreed to Hoyt’s offer of $50,000 in exchange for her silence, the suit says.